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Mitigation of Shuttle Effect in Li–S Battery Using a Self-Assembled Ultrathin Molybdenum Disulfide Interlayer
Author(s) -
Xiaoyun Yu,
Guangmin Zhou,
Yi Cui
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.8b19354
Subject(s) - molybdenum disulfide , materials science , molybdenum , nanotechnology , battery (electricity) , disulfide bond , lithium–sulfur battery , chemical engineering , electrochemistry , optoelectronics , composite material , electrode , metallurgy , power (physics) , chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , engineering , biochemistry
Lithium-sulfur batteries are promising for low-cost and high-energy storage, but their applications are still limited by poor cycling stability owing to soluble lithium polysulfide shuttling during battery operation. Avoiding shuttle effect is challenging but it is essential to avoid active material loss and prevent performance decay. Here, we use an ultrathin layer of MoS 2 with thickness of 10-40 nm, which is 1-2 orders of magnitude thinner than conventional interlayers, for Li-S batteries to mitigate polysulfide shuttling. The MoS 2 layer formed by exfoliated nanoflakes is deposited by the scalable liquid-based self-assembly method. With less than 1% of additional weight in the cathode, the MoS 2 interlayer with complete coverage inhibits polysulfide diffusion across the separator and therefore remarkably improves the battery performances. Reversible specific capacity reaches 1010 and 600 mA h g -1 at 0.5 and 2C rates, respectively, which decay slowly over 400 cycles (0.11% per cycle). Moreover, the MoS 2 films with high density of catalytic active flake edges enable high areal sulfur loading up to 10 mg cm -2 and areal capacity up to 9.7 mA h cm -2 at a current density of 3.2 mA cm -2 .

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